Home>Traffic Safety and Driving Courses -- Teen Drivers -- Part 1


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Roadrageous For Teens

Most driver safety education courses concentrate on teaching student drivers the meaning of traffic signs, how to react during a skid, etc. However, most accidents and especially most traffic fatalities are the result of driving BEHAVIOR: driving too fast for road conditions, driving when angry or tired, driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, reacting to poor driving by others on the road and so on.

Roadrageous™ was designed by psychologists to change behavior behind the wheel and to better protect drivers from the poor driving behavior of other drivers on the road…AND IT WORKS! Roadrageous™ has been documented in two independent studies conducted by the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles of the State of Florida to reduce collisions 64-74%.

The original Roadrageous™ program has been modified to be more accessible to the teenage audience without losing its powerful message and true effectiveness. More...

Government agency facts collated by Dr. Leon James


There were 187.2 million licensed drivers in the United States in 1999. Young drivers, between 15 and 20 years old, accounted for 6.8 percent (12.7 million) of the total, a 1.2 percent decrease from the 12.8 million young drivers in 1989.

In 1999, 8,175 15- to 20-year-old drivers were involved in fatal crashes — a 15 percent decrease from the 9,671 involved in 1989. Driver fatalities for this age group decreased by 16 percent between 1989 and 1999.

For young males, driver fatalities dropped by 20 percent, compared with a 3 percent decrease for young females (Table 3).

Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for 15 to 20 year olds (based on 1997 figures, which are the latest mortality data currently available from the National Center for Health Statistics).

In 1999, 3,561 drivers 15 to 20 years old were killed, and an additional 362,000 were injured, in motor vehicle crashes.

In 1999, 15 percent (8,175) of all the drivers involved in fatal crashes (56,352) were young drivers 15 to 20 years old, and 18 percent (1,964,000) of all the drivers involved in police-reported crashes (11,194,000) were young drivers.

“Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for people

Figure 1. Driver Fatalities and Drivers Involved in Fatal Crashes Among Drivers 15 to 20 Years Old, 1989-1999

In 1999, the estimated economic cost of police-reported crashes involving drivers between 15 and 20 years old was $32.2 billion.

When driver fatality rates are calculated on the basis of estimated annual travel, the highest rates are found among the youngest and oldest drivers. Compared with the fatality rate for drivers 25 through 69 years old, the rate for teenage drivers (16 to 19 years old) is about 4 times as high, and the rate for drivers in the oldest group is 9 times as high.

When driver fatality rates are calculated on the basis of estimated annual travel, the highest rates are found among the youngest and oldest drivers. Compared with the fatality rate for drivers 25 through 69 years old, the rate for teenage drivers (16 to 19 years old) is about 4 times as high, and the rate for drivers in the oldest group is 9 times as high.

Motorcycles

During 1999, 163 young motorcycle drivers (15-20 years old) were killed and an additional 6,000 were injured. Helmets are estimated to be 29 percent effective in preventing fatalities among motorcyclists.

NHTSA estimates that helmets saved the lives of 551 motorcyclists of all ages in 1999, and that if all motorcyclists had worn helmets, an additional 326 lives could have been saved. During 1999, 45 percent of the motorcycle drivers between 15 and 20 years old who were fatally injured in crashes were not wearing helmets. Of the young motorcycle drivers involved in fatal crashes in 1999, more than one-fourth (27 percent) were either unlicensed or driving with an invalid license.

Alcohol

NHTSA defines a fatal traffic crash as being alcohol-related if either a driver or a nonoccupant (e.g., pedestrian) had a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.01 grams per deciliter (g/dl) or greater in a police-reported traffic crash. Persons with a BAC of 0.10 g/dl or greater involved in fatal crashes are considered to be intoxicated. This is the legal limit of intoxication in most states.

In 1999, 21 percent of the young drivers 15 to 20 years old who were killed in crashes were intoxicated. Table 4. Alcohol Involvement Among Drivers 15 to 20 Years Old Involved in Fatal Crashes, 1999 “In 1999, 21 percent of the young drivers who were killed in crashes were intoxicated.”

All states and the District of Columbia now have 21-year-old minimum drinking age laws. NHTSA estimates that these laws have reduced traffic fatalities involving drivers 18 to 20 years old by 13 percent and have saved an estimated 19,121 lives since 1975. In 1999, an estimated 901 lives were saved by minimum drinking age laws.

Seventeen states have set 0.08 g/dl as the legal intoxication limit, and all states plus the District of Columbia have zero tolerance laws for drivers under the age of 21 (it is illegal for drivers under 21 to drive with BAC levels of 0.02 g/dl or greater).

Figure 3. Cumulative Estimated Number of Lives Saved by Minimum Drinking Age Laws, 1975-1999

For young drivers 15 to 20 years old, alcohol involvement is higher among males than among females. In 1999, 24 percent of the young male drivers involved in fatal crashes had been drinking at the time of the crash, compared with 11 percent of the young female drivers involved in fatal crashes.

Drivers are less likely to use restraints when they have been drinking. In 1999, 73 percent of the young drivers of passenger vehicles involved in fatal crashes who had been drinking were unrestrained. Of the young drivers who had been drinking and were killed in crashes, 79 percent were unrestrained.


From: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/news_press_release,142692.shtml

Teens Admit Text Messaging Most Distracting While Driving

In a national survey of more than 900 teens with driver's licenses from 26 high schools, teens rated the following behaviors or activities as "extremely" or "very" distracting:

Instant or text messaging while driving - 37 percent [The teen driver's] emotional state - 20 percent Having several friends in the car - 19 percent Talking on a cell phone - 14 percent Eating or drinking - 7 percent Having a friend in the car - 5 percent Listening to music - 4 percent

(...)

What Can Concerned Parents Do?

While most states have adopted or are adopting legislation around teen driving, the restrictions of teen driving laws vary from state to state. Based on the extensive research over the past seven years, SADD and Liberty Mutual have set forth the following all-encompassing recommendations for concerned parents of teenagers.

-- Know your state's Graduated Driver License laws and restrictions, including unsupervised driving, time of day, and passengers in the car, and enforce them. The Governors Highway Safety Association provides a description of each state's laws at http://www.statehighwaysafety.org/ .

-- Set family rules about driving and outline clear consequences for breaking the rules. Liberty Mutual and SADD suggest some rules if they are not covered by your state laws:

-- No use of alcohol or other drugs

-- No cell phone use, including text messaging

-- Limit or restrict friends in the car without an adult

-- No driving after 10 p.m.

-- Keep two hands on the wheel

- No distractions while driving, including eating, changing CDs, handling iPods, and putting on makeup -- Enforce consequences if a family rule is broken. The SADD/Liberty Mutual studies show that parental enforcement bolsters safe driving habits. More than half (52 percent) of teens who say their parents are unlikely to follow through on a consequence if they break a driving law report they talk on a cell phone while driving, compared to only 36 percent of teens who believe their parents would indeed penalize them.

-- Do as you say. Exhibit behaviors in the car that you would like your teen to emulate. And, don't engage in behaviors you have established as off limits for your teen. While young people say overwhelmingly their parents are or will be the biggest influence on how they drive, almost two thirds (62 percent) of high school teens say their parents talk on a cell phone while driving; almost half (48 percent) say their parents speed; and almost a third (31 percent) say their parents don't wear a safety belt. -- Sign a teen driving contract. SADD's Contract for Life can be found at http://www.sadd.org/contract.htm

 Web site: http://www.statehighwaysafety.org/  ||  http://www.sadd.org/contract.htm  

From: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/news_press_release,142692.shtml


From: http://www.abrn.com/abrn/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=442652

Texting while driving called critical disconnect among teenagers

Jul 19, 2007 By: James E. Guyette Automotive Body Repair News

(...)

Nearly two of every three people fatally injured in teen-driver crashes are people other than the driver; including the teen’s passengers, drivers and passengers of other vehicles, pedestrians and bicyclists, according to government statistics.

(...)

The recent survey, conducted by the American Automobile Association (AAA) and Seventeen Magazine, reveals that an alarmingly high number of teen drivers are engaging in critically risky behaviors while in the driver’s seat.

The survey, which is featured in Seventeen’s August issue currently on the newsstands, shows that 61 percent of teenagers admit to dangerous driving habits. Of that 61 percent, 46 percent say that they text message when driving and 51 percent talk on cell phones while driving. The research, conducted in April, covered more than 1,000 16- and 17-year-old drivers.

Motor vehicle wrecks are the No. 1 killer of 15- to 20-year-olds, resulting in the loss of more than 6,000 lives each year, according to crash figures compiled by the U.S. government. July and August have proven to be the deadliest months for 16- and 17-year-old drivers. And although parents may rightfully worry about their kids being out and about on Friday and Saturday nights, an AAA analysis of teen fatalities shows that after-school hours rival weekend nights as being equally dangerous.

(...)

Other teens in the vehicle can be a major distraction for teen drivers, and driver distraction is a factor in 25 percent to 50 percent of all crashes. Yet 58 percent of the AAA/Seventeen respondents said they drive with their friends in the car.

The research also reveals that 40 percent of teens exceed the speed limit by 10 miles per hour or more while driving, and 11 percent of teens admit to drinking or using other drugs before getting behind the wheel.

(...)

“Novice young drivers need experience to gain the proficiency that will help to keep them safe on the road,” Van Tassel says. “It’s critical for teens to drive in the safest environment for at least the first six months of unsupervised driving.”

Making the driving experience safer for teens includes ensuring that they drive during only during daylight hours and stick to familiar roads while traveling without any teen passengers. Parents can be positive role models by exhibiting good driving skills and behavior such as obeying speed limits, being courteous to other drivers, and avoiding the use of electronic devices while driving. “Parental involvement is critical,” he says.

(...)

It’s important not to overly frighten new drivers – you want them to be careful behind the wheel, not wracked with terror and driving 40 miles per hour on the freeway. Nor should every collision center in town be steadily displaying this type of warning, lest it lose its impact.

(...)

“The public is thirsty for new information on teen driving safety,” he observes, citing the array of instructional aids provided through first-responders, other government agencies and safety organizations such as AAA, which is aggressively enhancing its efforts to recruit the repair segment in its endeavors. “By the end of this year we’ll have more programs available and we’ll have more tools for repair shops to direct parents and their teens to,” Van Tassel says.

**An example of AAA’s teen-driver educational materials – a contract between teen and parent spelling out safe driving practices – is available here.

From: http://www.abrn.com/abrn/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=442652


 

 


 

Teenage Driving -- Web Links annotated by students of Dr. Leon James

http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/duip/spotlite/teendrivers.htm
I think that this a great site for parents to read before their child receives their license. It talks more about the graduated drivers licensing systems. There is information on how to prevent injury and how teens can safely gain more driving experience.

http://www.nsc.org/library/facts/yngdrive.htm
This site is a very good read for both adults and teens. It lists the risks associated with being a young driver. By knowing them you are more likely to be aware of the problems and be more conscious of the way you are driving.

http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/teenmvh.htm
This link is a straight forward document of facts of teenage driving. It lists the traffic accidents that they are involved in and shows the dangers of inexperience driving.

http://www.teendriving.com/
This site was made for teens and adults to gain safety tips on driving. I think that this is a great read and include real-life personal teen experiences that others shared. There are a lot of great additional links on this site to go into and learn new things. Looking at this site will be really beneficial to drivers’ of any age.

http://www.teendriving.com/index.html
This website was specifically made for teens that are learning or already know how to drive.  It is very easy to maneuver around this website. The left side has a list of different driving situations and each link gives tips or facts about driving.  It even has a link for driving in the country and driving in town.  There is a clear distinction between the two areas and the styles of driving in each.

http://www.drdriving.org/youth/
This particular text provides insight into youth aggressive driving.  It provides a small test to see how each youth when it comes to aggressive is driving.  It also provides possible consequences to those who violate the rules and provides an evaluation of the situations.

http://www.homeschool.com/articles/driving/default.asp
When reading this article, it first describes how teens first start to learn how to drive and it gives them a sense of independence.  It later goes on to tell the readers that as the parents, the teen will mimic your driving style.  In the end there was a recommendation to help teach a teen how to drive and avoiding certain types of cars.

http://www.physorg.com/news4460.html
article about how children learn their bad driving habits early and from parents

http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/pdf/nrd-30/NCSA/TSF2003/809774.pdf
facts of young drivers

See also this directory of links on children, youth, and teen drivers:
http://www.drdriving.org/youth/

Graduated Licensing Programs from Goggle Search

Graduated Licensing

All new drivers applying for their first car or motorcycle licence enter Ontario's Graduated Licensing System.
www.mto.gov.on.ca/english/dandv/driver/gradu/index.html - 19k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Graduated Driver's License

The graduated driver's license law (GDL) became effective on January 1, 1999. It compliments the existing driver's license program by introducing a ...
www.dps.state.mn.us/dvs/DriverLicense/Graduated%20DL/grad_license.htm - 8k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Illinois Graduated Driver Licensing System

Effective June 22, 2006, PA 94-0897 strengthens the Illinois Graduated Driver's License program by increasing the amount of practice time to 50 hours, ...
www.cyberdriveillinois.com/departments/drivers/programs/gdl.html - 15k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

National Safety Council Graduated Driver Licensing Symposium

Issues surrounding teen drivers and driving: graduated licensing, gradual privileges, scientific data on teens driving with passengers and teens driving at ...
www.nsc.org/gdlsym/index.htm - 10k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Graduated Licensing for Teen Drivers--Transportation Review

State legislatures have grappled with the issues of teen drivers and many have enacted a graduated licensing system as a solution. ...
www.ncsl.org/programs/transportation/trgradli.htm - 32k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Q&As: Teenagers Graduated driver licensing

IIHS answers frequently asked questions about graduated driver licensing for teenagers.
www.iihs.org/research/qanda/gdl.html - 26k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety

Graduated licensing systems are designed to phase young beginning drivers ... Advocates' optimal learner's stage graduated driver licensing (GDL) program ...
www.saferoads.org/issues/fs-GDL.htm - 23k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
[PDF]

What you need to know about Hawaii’s Graduated Licensing Program

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
DOE students: For further information regarding Hawaii’s Graduated Licensing Program,please see your high school’s. driver education coordinator. ...
www.hawaii.gov/dot/publicaffairs/safecommunities/GDL%20pdf.pdf - Similar pages - Note this

Saferoads.com - Driver Safety

Driver Safety Head Graphic, Drivers : Graduated Driver Licensing - New Drivers ... Graduated Driver Licensing: Questions and Answers ...
www.saferoads.com/drivers/drivers_newdrivers.html - 19k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

AAA Exchange

In 1997, AAA launched a grassroots effort to enact graduated driver licensing laws in all 50 states. At that time, only 8 states had GDL laws. ...
www.aaapublicaffairs.com/Main/Default.asp?CategoryID=14 - 70k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Graduated driver licensing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Graduated driver licensing systems are designed to provide new drivers of motor vehicles with driving experience and skills gradually over time in low-risk ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graduated_driver_licensing - 16k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

MADD Online: Graduated Driver's Licensing - Issue Brief

Graduated driver's licensing eases younger drivers into driving through a phased approach. In an ideal system, learner's permit holders may not drive unless ...
www.madd.org/takeaction/7602 - 24k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

GRADUATED DRIVERS LICENSE FOR TEENAGERS

Since teen drivers account for the #1 risk group among all drivers, a "GRADUATED DRIVERS LICENSE" is being proposed in this article by Richard Stryker. ...
www.mrtraffic.com/kidlicns.htm - 16k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Graduated Licensing

The objective of graduated driver licensing is to reduce crash rates by ensuring new drivers gain experience and can mature under conditions of low risk ...
www.safety-council.org/news/sc/2000/gradlic.html - 14k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Parent-Teen Driving Contract from AAA

Driver Contracts

Stronger driver licensing laws play a part in keeping roads safe for everyone, but parents play a critical role in enforcing these laws and serving as good role models for their children. Since many state laws lack key provisions, graduated driver licensing laws should be considered as baselines.

Parent-to-Parent Driver Agreement

AAA encourages parents to work as a team to ensure teens gain driving experience in the safest environment possible during that first year. AAA also encourages parents to talk with one another about the driving rules in their respective homes and encourages them to develop some common rules. That way, teens who are friends, have the same or similar rules, which helps remove some of the peer pressure to break parental-imposed rules. Families are joining forces by creating voluntary parent-to-parent agreements between families that define acceptable driving behavior. Some high schools and community organizations also are encouraging these contracts to create a support system for parents and greater protection for teens.

Download the Parent-to-Parent Driver Agreement

Parent-Teen Driver Agreement

As a parent, you also can add protective guidelines through a Parent-Teen Driving Agreement. These agreements were pioneered about 15 years ago to address some key facts:

A recent study by the National Institutes of Health confirms that parental involvement and restrictions significantly reduce risky driving behavior during a driver's first 12-18 months behind the wheel. Teens lack experience and judgment and are susceptible to impulse behavior and peer pressure. An agreement can help teens govern their behavior in unfamiliar circumstances. An agreement communicates that driving is a privilege that your family takes seriously.

It's important that parents and teens share a clear understanding of expectations and consequences. Putting expectations and consequences in writing helps parents enforce standards consistently.

Parents should review and adjust the agreement before presenting it to the teen for discussion. To make this agreement meaningful, it's important that you do not allow your teen to drive independently until the agreement is signed.

Schedule a review date for the agreement. As your new driver demonstrates good driving habits and good judgment over time, specific points in the agreement may be renegotiated. You may relax restrictions or allow special privileges, or if your teen has not lived up to the agreement, add new restrictions.

Parent-to-Parent Agreement

We, the undersigned parents, agree to work as a team to ensure teens gain

driving experience in the safest environment possible. Because we care about

our teens and respect the responsibilities of parents, we:
 

Agree that our teens won’t drive with other teen passengers or be driven

by a teen driver for a period of at least _____ months. We recognize that

each passenger increases risk. We shall not allow our new driver to have

passengers. We ask that you place the same restriction on your teen.
 

Agree that our teens won’t drive at night between the hours of _____ to

_____ for a period of at least _____ months.
 

Agree to talk to our teens about the importance of always wearing a safety

belt – in every seating position in the vehicle.
 

Shall not provide alcohol or other drugs to teens who are guests in our

home, nor will we allow teens to bring alcohol or other drugs into our

home. We ask that you observe these same restrictions.
 

Agree to monitor our behavior in the car and be the best role models

possible for our teen drivers.
 

If we suspect your teen has been drinking or using other drugs, or is otherwise

unfit to drive, we will call you. If we cannot reach you, we will get your teen home

safely.
 

We will call you if we have questions about the whereabouts, supervision or

driving behavior of our teen. We encourage you to call us if you have any

concerns.
 

Parent/Guardian Signatures: Parent/Guardian Signatures:

______________________________ ______________________________

______________________________ ______________________________

Contact Numbers: Contact Numbers:

______________________________ ______________________________

(Day) (Night) (Day) (Night)

* Although we intend to honor the terms of this agreement, we understand

and agree that this is not a legally enforceable contract.



July 5, 2002

Teen at wheel makes driving doubly deadly

Robert Davis USA TODAY

CAMARILLO, Calif. -- When 17-year-old Mallory Gompert's friends learn that the weird growl in her car comes from a black box her folks use to monitor every second of her driving, they all say the same thing: ''Don't tell my parents about that thing!''

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But the secret is out. In this Southern California town -- rocked recently by fatal crashes involving teens -- parents are increasingly asking Mallory's dad and his co-workers at Road Safety International when they can get a black box for their own kid's car.

The Camarillo-based company says the $280 device will be in stores nationwide by November. Called SafeForce, it records such data as the car's speed and growls warnings when the driver is going too fast or turning too hard. Parents can check the box later and see for themselves just how fast their teenager was driving.

It's far too soon to tell if the new tool will help teens drive more safely. Prototypes, developed from a more complicated device used on emergency vehicles, have been installed in only a handful of private passenger cars.

But evidence shows that the devices on emergency vehicles have reduced accidents in ambulances and firetrucks.

The black box is the latest of various tools the nation is using to steer teens into safer driving. About a dozen services have cropped up that allow parents, for a fee, to slap a bumper sticker on the family car that asks other drivers to report teen driving behavior on a toll-free telephone line. And many states use graduated drivers' license programs to give teens more road experience and adult supervision before they are granted unrestricted licenses.

Summer is when kids need that oversight most. With school out, these inexperienced and exuberant drivers are behind the wheel more. That makes July and August the deadliest months for teenage drivers .At greatest risk are the youngest drivers: They die at higher rates than any other drivers. A USA TODAY analysis of federal data has found that while the 1,134 drivers ages 15, 16 and 17 who were killed in crashes in 2000 made up only a small part of the 25,492 drivers killed in vehicle crashes, those ages represent the smallest number of licensed drivers. Teen drivers die at more than twice the rate of all drivers.

''This is really a public health issue,'' says Bella Dinh-Zarr, a former traffic safety researcher for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( news - web sites) who now is the director of road safety policy for the American Automobile Association (AAA). ''Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for people 1 to 35.''

States are struggling to keep kids safe. Some states do better than others. The USA TODAY analysis found that Alaska, for instance, has a death rate among teen drivers that is more than twice the national average. North Dakota and Rhode Island have rates less than half the national average.

More than 30 states have passed laws -- known as graduated license laws -- that attempt to force kids to drive more with a parent before they get their own licenses. The teens may get a provisional license until they've spent a certain number of hours behind the wheel, accompanied by a parent or guardian. At the same time, laws prohibiting drunken driving and mandating use of seat belts are tougher than at any time in driving history. But the key, Dinh-Zarr and others say, is enforcement.

''Even when states do have tougher teen driving laws,'' Dinh-Zarr says, ''the problem may be that parents don't know they have this tool. Or the enforcement of these laws may not be very good in these states.''

Watching the rescuers

For 10 years, some ambulances, fire trucks and other emergency vehicles have been equipped with the Road Safety black box that monitors the performance of drivers. Emergency crews call the boxes growlers -- or worse -- because they squawk when the rig exceeds pre-set parameters for speed, acceleration, braking and more.

Their supervisors call the boxes their eyes and ears.

''People drive perfectly when their supervisor is riding with them,'' says Larry Selditz, president of Road Safety. ''This device allows the supervisor to stay in that front seat all the time.''

Those $2,500 devices are credited with reducing accident rates and saving maintenance costs in rescue fleets across the nation. But they also have surprised even their makers by spotting trends that are otherwise hard to detect.

Occasionally, a paramedic who ranks among the best drivers in an ambulance corps based on black box monitoring for months on end will pop up on a supervisor's hit list for overly aggressive driving. When the supervisor confronts the medic about the change in driving patterns, the root cause is often marital trouble or some other stress at home.

''They say, 'I never realized it was bleeding over to my work,' '' says Scott Springstead, operations supervisor for Sunstar ambulance in Pinellas County, Fla. ''Without the system, they would be out there driving that way, and we would never know it.''

Jeff Gompert, Road Safety's vice president, wondered as he traveled around the nation selling boxes to rescuers whether the same system might work as well for his teenage daughter, Mallory.

The company (at www.roadsafety.com) found a way to make the device cheaper for family use. The emergency rigs automatically transmit the driving data via radio to a computer at their home base whenever the rig returns from a tour. The family version uses a flash memory card -- the postage-stamp-sized memory card that drives everything from digital cameras to handheld organizers -- to record the data in the car. It must be carried inside and plugged into an inexpensive reader on the family PC. Otherwise, the devices are nearly identical.

''This is something that every car should have,'' says Janice Manzer of Camarillo. By word of mouth, she managed to get a prototype of the box in her 17-year-old son's car after he had an accident in the school parking lot and got a speeding ticket on a city street. ''It's like having a babysitter in the car.''

The early results from the device's recordings have been eye-popping for parents.

The box showed that Mallory Gompert -- both smart and polite as she addresses a reporter -- had a lead foot. The teenager routinely cruised in the family's Ford Explorer at more than 80 mph, and she took turns dangerously fast. She had no idea, she says, that she was over the limit. Neither, of course, did her parents.

''I used to dread it when my dad would come home with his PC and say, 'Let's see how your driving is,' '' Mallory says.

''She said, 'My life is terrible,' '' her mother Donna recalls. '' 'Why does Dad have to work for Road Safety? I hate my life!' ''

Now she likes the way the box reminds her to pay attention when she ''spaces out.'' Because of her improved driving, she says, other parents ask her to drive their kids, and she hauls her siblings to practices and other places. ''I was a soccer mom at age 16,'' she says.

And the box has spotted a teen driving trend much the same way it identified stressed-out ambulance drivers. The device has shown that Mallory and almost every other teen who has tested the box drive worse when they're racing to get home before curfew.

That finding in particular rattles the nerves of parents who still ache for the local families who lost their two teens in a late-night crash just before Christmas.

The tragic deaths were not unlike other teen driving fatalities that occur, on average, three times a day across the USA. Feeling good after his high school team won its basketball game, the teenage driver was tearing through town in a luxury SUV. He hit a wall at 107 mph. He was 16. The driver and one passenger died. Two other passengers survived.

''They were just trying to have fun,'' says Ryan Evans, 17, who knew them and now has the black box in his car. Does he think the box would have saved them? ''It might have,'' he says.

Inexperience kills

Charles Butler, director of safety services at AAA, says the Road Safety black box is a potentially useful, one-of-a-kind device. But he says parents would be mistaken to believe they could install the box in a car and automatically make their teenager a safer driver.

The biggest threat to young drivers, Butler says, is something the box can't fix -- inexperience. Teen crashes, he says, are most often caused by three factors: not looking in the right place at the right time; being distracted behind the wheel by conversations, music, cellphones or even daydreams; and not being able to ''manage the space around their car.''

''It takes two to four years'' of driving to become proficient, he says. Somewhere between 750 and 1,500 miles of driving in various conditions, he says, the ''crash probability'' begins to drop.

''Inexperienced 16-year-olds have three times as many crashes as 18-year-olds,'' Butler says. ''If the box helps give parents peace of mind, maybe it's worth it. But if you really want peace of mind, don't let your kid drive alone. You can be the black box.''

AAA offers tips for parents on how to teach driving. The video and a handbook, called Teaching Your Teens to Drive: A partnership for survival, cost $21.95 (members get a discount) and are available to everyone through local AAA chapters or at www.aaa.com

Bryce Riach, 17, says the black box in his 1998 Toyota Tacoma has no impact on his driving. ''I pretty much beep on every turn,'' he says, one week after the box was installed. ''It's funny. . . . When it starts making noise, I just turn the (punk) music up,'' he says. ''If my parents were looking at my results, it would be a bigger factor.''

His parents know he has the box in his car as part of a study for Road Safety, but they have not yet seen any of his performance reports. Bryce says his parents don't know how he drives. ''When I drive with them, I drive a lot safer, so they don't really know,'' he says.

Road Safety's Selditz agreed to display the previous five days of Bryce's driving on the company computer. The screen is full of red violations. There are 34 turns where at least half of the tires' traction was lost to high speed. There are more than 70 minutes of driving faster than 80 mph.

But one moment stands out. At 8:55 p.m. on the previous Thursday, he had lost nearly 70% of his traction while making a hard left turn. He had his headlights on, but he was not wearing his seat belt.

Bryce grins. ''That is the island by my house,'' he explains. ''It's an illegal turn, but if I don't make that turn I have to go up a mile and make a U-turn.''

When a reporter tells his father, Ron Riach, a former firefighter, about the turn, the father of four young drivers is shocked: ''That is a revelation. Especially about the seat belt. I have drilled that into their heads.''

Bryce has heard the horror stories his dad has brought home from years on the street as a firefighter. But the boy says he doesn't worry about getting hurt.

''After I come close to getting into an accident, I think about what happened to those other people,'' he says. ''But when I'm speeding, I don't really think about it.''

Nearly two months have passed since Bryce got the black box. His parents still haven't looked at his black box reports, but constant reviews by Road Safety officials -- who have threatened to remove the box and a $50-a-week payment for his participation -- have begun to tame his driving.

''My driving has changed a lot,'' he says. ''I don't really like it, but it's good for me. It was hard to get used to, but now that I am used to it, I can still get around quickly.''

His dad says Bryce has learned to drive within the box's parameters. ''He's safer,'' Ron Riach says, ''but to what extent, who knows.''

original here

 

Self-descriptions of Aggressive Driving Behavior from DrDriving's Survey

  • Young people who drive sports cars, SUVs, and light trucks report themselves as both more aggressive and more excellent drivers, compared to young people who drive family or economy cars and vans.
  • Young people rate themselves only slightly less excellent than drivers with more experience (7.5 vs. 8.1 where 10 is maximum excellence).
  • Young people report significantly more aggressive driving behaviors than older drivers in the following:
    swearing, cussing, and name calling
  • speeding
  • not signaling required lane changes or turns
  • driving through red lights
  • tailgating dangerously
  • enjoying fantasies of violence
  • feeling less compassion for others on the road (especially young male drivers)
  • experience rage while driving (especially young male drivers)
  • making an insulting gesture (male young drivers, but not female)
  • experience impatience while driving (especially young male drivers)
  • experience hostility while driving (especially young male drivers)

 

Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2002 15:46:37 -0500
From: Gary Direnfeld gary123@sympatico.ca
To: leon@Hawaii.Edu

Subject: Focus group research brings updates to I Promise Program

The Ontario Neurotrauma Foundation provided a research grant to the Plan-It Safe research program of the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario to conduct a series of focus groups involving teen, parents and community members for formative feedback to the program. Overall the program tested well and the groups provided a number of recommendations pertaining to the materials of the program and the website.

We have updated the website on the basis of their recommendations provided during a presentation in Ottawa last week. You will be able to view a new version of the parent-youth mutual safe driving contract as well as a new program description, order forms and personal biography.

www.ipromiseprogram.com

The Dominion of Canada General Insurance Company now offers a discount on the insurance premium in the province of Ontario to those youths participating on the program whereas, The Cooperators with their agent in Central Newfoundland cover half the cost of the program.

Healthy Lancaster, a public health organization in Lancaster, South Carolina is distributing the program at no cost to community participants and soon the Driscoll Children's Hospital in Corpus Christi, Texas will be doing the same.

Our primary distribution plan remains to develop partnerships with insurance companies, as they are the economic beneficiary from a reduction of crashes and hence insurance claims. The economic burden of teen related car crashes stands at $32.8 Billion US. Their participation is a reflection of good corporate citizenry meeting the complimentary objectives of risk reduction for parents of new teen drivers and loss prevention for themselves.

Any insurance agent/broker is able to print and provide an order form from our website to their clients, for them to obtain the program at the $45.00 cost. This makes a good promotional item for the agent/broker while promoting risk reduction to the policyholder ^Ö at no cost to the agent/broker. Many agents and brokers have
already received personalized order forms by email, which they then print, photocopy and distribute to
policyholders at their discretion.

We are grateful to the many companies, community organizations, police services and service clubs that have
placed a link to the I Promise Program.

Best,

Gary
Gary Direnfeld, Executive Director
I Promise Program
20 Suter Crescent,
Dundas, Ontario, Canada
L9H 6R5

(905) 628-4847
gary123@sympatico.ca 
www.ipromiseprogram.com

 

Crash Statistics


Injuries (rounded off numbers) Fatalities (rounded off numbers)
  MALE FEMALE
Years
Old
Injured Rate 
100,000
Injured Rate 
100,000
16-20 281,000 2,900 309,000 3,400
21-24 171,000 2,400 173,000 2,600
25-34 349,000 1,800 349,000 1,800
35-44 286,000 1,300 298,000 1,300
45-54 172,000 1,000 186,000 1,100
55-64 88,000 843 101,000 900
Total 1,600,000 1,300 1,754,000 1,300
  MALE FEMALE
Years
Old
Killed Rate 
100,000
Killed Rate 
100,000
16-20 3,900 40 1,900 20
21-24 2,800 40 900 14
25-34 5,300 27 2,000 10
35-44 4,500 20 2,000 9
45-54 3,200 19 1,500 9
55-64 2,000 19 1,200 10

 

Percentage of Fatal Crashes by Characteristic, 1998
Driver Age: 16 17-19 20-49
Driver error 80 75 62
Speeding 36 31 22
3+ occupants 33 26 19
Single vehicle 41 37 30
Drivers killed with 0.01+ BAC 8 25 47

From Mr.Traffic -- see the rest here


More Passengers Make Teen Drivers Deadlier

Study Says 'Foolishness and Distractions' Rise With Riders

March 22, 2000

CHICAGO (AP) -- Blaming "foolishness and distractions," researchers reported today that the risk of a teenage driver dying increases with each additional passenger -- particularly with young passengers.

Johns Hopkins School of Public Health researcher Li-Hui Chen and her
colleagues found that 16-year-olds carrying one passenger were 39
percent more likely to get killed than those driving alone.

That increased to 86 percent with two passengers and 182 percent with three or more. The rate for 17-year-olds was higher: 48 percent, 158 percent and 207 percent, respectively.

The rate was as much as 21 times higher during early morning hours when passengers were present, according to the study in today's Journal of the American Medical Association.

Chen also found that the driver death rate increased significantly when the
passengers themselves were in their teens or 20s.

Inexperience proves lethal to others.

While the death statistics relate specifically to drivers, experts said
other studies have shown that accidents involving new teen drivers
also often kill or seriously injure passengers and people in other vehicles.

The problem is "general foolishness and distractions" for drivers who are just getting to know the rules of the road, said Robert Foss of the University of North Carolina Highway Safety Research Center.

"They will egg one another on to try to run a stop light or say, `Let's see if you can get it up to 70 miles an hour before the next stop sign,'" Foss said.

Even more often, he said, it's simpler things that are distracting -- animated conversation, for example.

(...)


Other Facts  

compiled by Dr. Leon James

  1. Less than 40% of all teenage drivers use their belts.

  2. About half of all fatal motor vehicle crashes involving teenagers occur at night-especially weekend nights.

  3. Driving curfews work-a dramatic 62% reduction in crash involvement during curfew hours.

  4. Sixteen year old drivers are more likely to be involved in an accident than any other age group.

  5. Driver death rate increases significantly when the passengers are in their teens or 20s.

  6. 16-year-olds carrying one passenger are 40 percent more likely to get killed than those driving alone. That increases to 86 percent with two passengers and 182 percent with three or more.

  7. Drivers between the ages of 15 and 20 account for 7 percent of the driving population but are involved in 14 percent of all fatal crashes.

  8. Graduated licensing bills were introduced in at least 18 states and the District of Columbia in 1999. Eleven states enacted new laws.

  9. The American Automobile Association conducted a national public affairs study in 1997. Of the more than 11,000 members surveyed, nine of 10 support graduated licensing.

  10. A study released by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety in January 1999, compared the crash rates for 15- to 17-year-old drivers in Florida with teens of the same age in Alabama, a state without a graduated licensing program. The study showed an overall decrease in crash rates of 9 percent for teens in Florida but no similar decline in Alabama.

  11. The Department of Public Safety reports that the number of people killed in crashes where the drivers are aged 16 to 17 decreased more than 26 percent after graduated licensing went into effect. Driver's license suspensions for this age group increased dramatically by 230 percent after the new law.

  12. In 1997, there were 9,626,944 teen drivers.

  13. Every year 5,500 to 6,000 teens are killed in the United States due to vehicular accidents--that's 16 teen drivers per day, every day.

  14. Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for 15 to 20 year-olds.

  15. 16-year-old drivers are nine times more likely to be involved in a crash than the general population.

  16. One 15 to 20 year old is injured every second in a motor vehicle accident.

  17. One teen dies every 3 hours in a motor vehicle accident.

  18. 16-year-old drivers speed and run off the road most.

  19. 16-year-old drivers are cited for more mistakes than anyone except for drivers over 82.

  20. They crash far more at night and hit trees and poles more often.

  21. Though they're new drivers, one in seven had a previous accident or ticket.

  22. 16-year-old drivers carry the most passengers-mostly teens-who are less likely to wear seat belts.

  23. Their crash rate is five times higher than drivers over 25.

  24. Automobile crashes are by far the leading killer of teens, causing one out of every three deaths.

  25. When they're driving with other teens, seat belt usage, which is already low, goes down even further.

  26. Risk-taking goes up, and you see some passengers egging the driver on, causing distractions, or turning up the CD player.

  27. Teenagers drive less than all but the oldest people, but their numbers of crashes and crash deaths are disproportionately high.

  28. The risk of crash involvement per mile driven among drivers 16-19 years old is 4 times the risk among older drivers.

  29. Risk is highest at age 16-17. In fact, the crash rate per mile driven is almost 3 times as high among 16 year-olds as it is among 18-19 year-olds.

  30. Motor vehicle death rates per 100,000 people in 1997 peaked at age 18 (drivers) and 17-18 (passengers).

  31. Crashes are a leading cause of disability related to head and spinal cord injuries in this age group (17-18).


How many teen drivers are there?

The first year the driver license data was broken out by age was 1964; there were 7,874,993 licenses issued to drivers under the age of 20 (Highway Statistics Summary to 1995)
In 1997, there were 9,626,944 teen drivers Highway Statistics 1997

 

Home>Traffic Safety and Driving Courses -- Teen Drivers -- Part 1